The Manila Times

Japan starts trial for virus cure

- XINHUA

TOKYO: Japan’s Fujifilm has begun clinical trials to test the effectiven­ess of its antiflu drug Avigan in treating patients with the new coronaviru­s, after reports of promising results in China.

Trials in China have suggested Avigan could play a role in shortening the recovery time for patients infected with coronaviru­s.

“The trial will be conducted on 100 patients until the end of June,” a company spokesman told Agence France- Presse on Wednesday. “We will collect data, analyze them and file for approval after that.”

The drug would be administer­ed for a maximum of 14 days to coronaviru­s patients between 20 and 74 years old with mild pneumonia, the spokesman said.

The study excludes pregnant women due to side effects shown in animal testing, he added.

The phase three trial comes after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Saturday said the government “will begin the necessary process to formally approve [ Avigan] as a treatment against the new coronaviru­s.”

Tokyo reported 78 new coronaviru­s cases on Tuesday — the highest single-day increase for Japan’s capital — as pressure builds to lock down the city.

The latest rise in people testing positive in Tokyo came as Japan recorded over 200 new coronaviru­s cases on the same day, the biggest single- day jump during the outbreak, according to public broadcaste­r NHK.

China has already completed clinical trials on favipiravi­r, the main ingredient in Avigan, the country’s Ministry of Science and Technology said last month.

Two trials in the country found the drug shortened recovery time for patients, but Fujifilm was not involved in those programs.

Avigan is currently approved for manufactur­e and sale in Japan as an antiviral drug for flu.

“It is expected that Avigan may potentiall­y have an antiviral effect on the new coronaviru­s” given the way it works on the flu virus, Fujifilm said in a statement announcing the trial.

Researcher­s and companies around the world are racing to find a cure for the new coronaviru­s, with the focus on existing medicines such as anti-malaria and anti- human immunodefi­ciency disease drugs. EUREKA?

Trials in China have suggested Avigan could play a role in shortening the recovery time for patients infected with the coronaviru­s.

Hydroxychl­oroquine and chloroquin­e to treat malaria have shown early promise against the coronaviru­s in early studies in

France and China. But experts urge caution until bigger trials demonstrat­e their effectiven­ess.

Medical researcher­s around the

world are also working to find a vaccine for the virus, which has so far killed more than 42,000 people globally.

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